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How to Lose Friends & Alienate People

 
Movies:

How to Lose Friends and Alienate People

  • Director: Robert B. Weide
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Workplace Comedy, Urban Comedy
  • Themes: Fashion World, Boss from Hell, Big Break
  • Main Cast: Simon Pegg, Kirsten Dunst, Jeff Bridges, Danny Huston, Gillian Anderson, Megan Fox
  • Release Year: 2008
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 110 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Frequent Curb Your Enthusiasm director Robert B. Weide makes his feature directorial debut with this screen adaptation of British writer Toby Young's comedic novel of the same name. When self-promoting scribe Sidney Young (Simon Pegg) accepts a position as a contributing editor for iconic fashion magazine "Sharps," his subsequent attempts to ingratiate himself with both his egotistical boss, Clayton Harding, and the superficial celebrities who populate the pages of the magazine prove disastrously hilarious. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

Based on the memoir by Toby Young, a British journalist who's made a career out of what he calls "negative charisma," How to Lose Friends and Alienate People lampoons the self-importance of Hollywood, the publishing world, and well, Toby Young (known in this roman à clef as Sidney Young). It pulls off this satirizing brand of comedy in some wildly amusing ways -- it's when the film abandons the satire that things start to drag.

Simon Pegg plays the beguilingly obnoxious writer, who's running a soon to be defunct humor magazine out of his London apartment when he gets a call from Clayton Harding, the editor in chief of a Vanity Fair pseudonym called Sharps Magazine, offering him a job in New York. Convinced that he was hired for his caustic wit and biting disdain for celebrity culture, Sidney subsequently embarks on a series of tactless misadventures that make awesomely merciless fun of every vapid aspect of the stargazing glitter-mag industry. The bits themselves are alright on paper, but they're ten times funnier onscreen because Pegg sells them with such blind exuberance (he could take home the Oscar for manic silly dancing). Of course, the most brilliantly mocked character is usually Sidney himself, with his transparent hunger to get behind the velvet ropes, but Kirsten Dunst plays a good straight man to his antics, and there's a great turn by Danny Huston, who once again employs his training in Creepy Grin Acting as a slimy section editor. There's also a fantastic appearance by Gillian Anderson, who positively kills it as an impeccably shrewd, string-pulling publicist with the keys to just about any star worth writing about, and the sway to keep a magazine like Sharps from ever using its teeth.

Jeff Bridges plays the powerful but bored Clayton Harding, who would be in the middle of a midlife crisis if his disillusionment weren't tempered with scotch-soaked apathy. Hit with pangs of nostalgia for his irreverent youth and compunction for his insipid empire, it turns out that he hired Sidney to come in as a bottom-rung contributing editor in the celeb-gossip section more or less on a whim. Bridges utilizes an odd combination of hamming it up and phoning it in, which somehow ends up stealing the whole movie. Even in a perfectly cut suit and with his silver mane slicked back, he still calls to mind "The Dude" from the Big Lebowski every time he speaks, partly because he seems to be playing every scene drunk, even when his character isn't drinking (but is, we can assume, spaced out on ennui. And maybe an offscreen highball). It's possible that this effect was intended by the director, as the film includes what appear to be a smattering of Dude references, including a character who drinks White Russians (a theme that did not, for the record, appear in the book), but maybe Bridges' effortless charm (effortless to the point of detachment, in this case) is just so damn bewitching that you can't help making the rest of the movie about him in your own head.

The fact that Bridges steals the show by barely trying is telling, but it could be a lot worse. The movie is consistently funny; the problem is that it could have been a lot funnier, and probably more interesting. There's a scene about halfway in where we learn some unexpected stuff about Sidney's past -- a fairly unique twist that provides a lot of potential for the direction of the story. But instead of running with it, the script completely drops the revelation in favor of a prototypical romcom plot, which isn't executed too badly but also doesn't quite seem right. This is basically the weakness of the whole movie: there was clearly more room to explore Sidney's jerky behavior and general piggishness to hilarious ends, and there was apparently even the potential to pursue a little aw-shucks-maybe-he's-not-so-bad character development, but the shoehorned romance, while fairly sweet and rarely saccharine, just doesn't fit. They toned down the main character's extremely entertaining nastiness so that it could make any kind of sense for him to get the girl, but you can't help feeling like they cheated you out of more laughs -- especially when most people would go see a conventional romantic comedy if they wanted to see a guy get the girl, lose the girl, and get the girl back. Maybe it's a little naïve to complain about Hollywood watering down and standardizing a story this way, but considering the subject matter, it's also a little ironic. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Max Minghella - Vincent Lepak; Miriam Margolyes - Mrs. Kowalski; Bill Paterson - Richard Young; Diana Kent - Rachel Petkoff

Credit

Jina Jay - Casting, Justine Baddeley - Casting, Kimbery Davis-Wagner - Casting, Laurie Borg - Co-producer, Toby Young - Co-producer, Annie Hardinge - Costume Designer, Robert B. Weide - Director, David Freeman - Editor, Gary Smith - Executive Producer, Tessa Ross - Executive Producer, Courtney Solomon - Executive Producer, Allan Zeman - Executive Producer, Paul White - Executive Producer, Simon Fawcett - Executive Producer, Peter Swords King - Hair Styles, David Arnold - Composer (Music Score), Karen Elliott - Musical Direction/Supervision, Peter Swords King - Makeup, John Beard - Production Designer, Oliver Stapleton - Cinematographer, Stephen Woolley - Producer, Elizabeth Karlsen - Producer, Peter Straughan - Screenwriter, Toby Young - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Devil Wears Prada; Intern; Swimming With Sharks; Zoolander; Prêt-à-Porter; Perfume
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Wikipedia: How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (film)
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How to Lose Friends & Alienate People
Directed by Robert B. Weide
Produced by Stephen Woolley
Elizabeth Karlsen
Written by Peter Straughan
Toby Young (memoir)
Starring Simon Pegg
Kirsten Dunst
Megan Fox
Danny Huston
Gillian Anderson
and
Jeff Bridges
Music by David Arnold
Cinematography Oliver Stapleton
Editing by David Freeman
Distributed by Channel Four Films (UK)
Paramount Pictures (UK/AUS)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (US)
Release date(s) October 3, 2008
Running time 110 minutes
Country United Kingdom
United States
Language English
Budget $28 million[1]
Gross revenue $17,416,598 (worldwide)[2]

How to Lose Friends & Alienate People is a 2008 comedy film based upon British writer Toby Young's 2001 memoir of the same name. The film follows a similar storyline, about his five year struggle to make it in the United States after employment at Sharps Magazine.[3] The names of the magazine and people Young came into contact with during the time were changed for the film adaptation. The film version (adapted by Peter Straughan) is a highly fictionalized account, and differs greatly from the work it was built upon. It was distributed in the United States by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and in the United Kingdom by Paramount Pictures and Channel Four Films (the former also distributed in Australia).

The film was directed by Robert B. Weide and stars Simon Pegg as Sidney Young, Kirsten Dunst as Alison Olsen, Jeff Bridges as Clayton Harding, Danny Huston as Lawrence Maddox, Gillian Anderson as Eleanor Johnson, and Megan Fox as Sophie Maes. The cast also includes Max Minghella and Margo Stilley. How to Lose Friends And Alienate People was released in both the United States and United Kingdom on October 3, 2008.

Contents

Plot

Sidney Young (Simon Pegg) is a smalltime, aspiring British journalist who works for a left-wing radical magazine. Following an incident at a party where Sidney accidentally lets a pig loose he is hired to work for an upscale magazine in New York City. He is hired by Clayton Harding (Jeff Bridges), editor of Sharps magazine, a man Sidney had previously lampooned in his own magazine.

Sidney annoys the staff he works with, first Alison Olsen (Kirsten Dunst), who is only there to pay the bills whilst she finishes her book, then his boss Lawrence Maddox (Danny Huston). He also dares to target the star clients of power publicist Eleanor Johnson (Gillian Anderson). He then meets new rising star Sophie Maes (Megan Fox) however he is told by Lawrence to not talk to her. Sidney makes it his mission to become something within the business, however, it is almost ruined when he accidentally kills Sophie's dog. Luckily, Alison covers for him and nobody else finds out it was him.

At a party, Alison and Sidney's relationship grows when she reveals she's just ended an affair with Lawrence. Sidney stops her from driving home drunk, causing him to miss his opportuinity to sleep with Sophie. At a later party, however, just when Sidney was about to ask her out, it is revealed Lawrence has left his wife and that he and Alison are officially together. In a desperate attempt to up his career, he begs Eleanor to publish a piece on Vincent, a director he truly hates.

The next day at work Clayton reveals that both Alison and Lawrence have left, and he promotes Sidney. Sidney finally becomes successful, getting all the girls that were digusted by him before and even catching the eye of Sophie. The night before the awards ceremony she stated that if he gave her his late mother's ring and she won best actress, she would have sex with him. Going to the ceremony the next day he sees Lawrence, now being someone he used to be, stating that he and Alison split as she was in love with him. When the winner is revealed, he steals back his mother's ring from Sophie as she is about to collect her award, and revealing that he killed her dog. A huge fight ensues and Sidney leaves, quiting his job at Sharps and heading to New York.

He meets Alison in the park, where they were showing her favourite movie. She has finished her book and the two finally get together, with him giving her his mother's ring. The movie ends with him accidentally throwing the book onto a candle and jumping for it to stop it from going into flames.

Main Cast

  • Simon Pegg as Sidney Young: based upon Toby Young as he is portrayed in the memoir.
  • Kirsten Dunst as Alison Olsen: Young's colleague and eventual love interest.
  • Jeff Bridges as Clayton Harding: Young's magazine editor who is loosely based on Graydon Carter, the editor of Vanity Fair.[1]
  • Danny Huston as Lawrence Maddox: Young's direct boss.
  • Gillian Anderson as Eleanor Johnson: the publicist pulling all the strings. Eleanor is loosely based on Nadine Johnson, a high powered publicist in New York City.
  • Megan Fox as Sophie Maes: a budding starlet and the object of Young's lust.

Production

How to Lose Friends & Alienate People is an independent film, and was described as "a testosterone-laced [The] Devil Wears Prada."[1]

In 2006, Simon Pegg was announced as the lead,[4] Kirsten Dunst was revealed to appear in the film in late April 2007,[5] and in May 2007, Jeff Bridges and Gillian Anderson were added.[6]

Toby Young, who wrote the memoir, was banned from the set because he was distracting the cast and crew.[7] He does appear in the film though.

Metro Station's song "Shake It" and Phantom Planet's song "Do The Panic" were used in the trailer.

Box office

The film opened as one of the UK's box office number one films, taking the equivalent of US$7,055,425 during its run there. It took the equivalent of US$2,927,210 in Russia and the equivalent of US$1,963,356 in Australia.[8] In the United States and Canada, the film grossed the equivalent of just US$2,778,242.

The total worldwide gross was about US$17.3 million, forty percent less than the production budget.[2]

Reviews

The film has received overall negative reviews. It currently holds a 37 percent "rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, however not everybody disliked it, for example The Spectator called the film "fun". Curiously, Toby Young himself is a regular columnist for the Spectator, but said it "yaps around the ankles of its subject without ever moving in for a decent-sized, satisfying bite."[9] The Sunday Times said the film "has more laughs than any British comedy to appear over the past decade."[10]

In the U.S., Roger Ebert called it "possibly the best movie that could be made about Toby Young that isn't rated NC-17" and gave it 3½ out of 4 stars.[11]

References

External links


 
 

 

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